Daily Trust

Start-up Lilium raises $90m to make five-seater ‘air taxi’

- By Zakariyya Adaramola, with agency reports

Lilium, a German start-up with ambitions to develop a ‘flying taxi’, has raised $90 million in funding to make its flying car a reality.

The new round of investment makes it one of the best-funded electric aircraft projects to date.

The firm is developing a fiveseat electric powered jet capable of vertical-take off, that could whizz passengers on a 12 mile (20 kilometre) journey in just five minutes.

Lilium said it plans to use the new funds to expand hiring and carry it through the next developmen­t stages of its fiveseater electric jet, buying it time to meet stringent regulatory approvals.

The 70-employee company has roughly as many outstandin­g job postings as current staff, and plans to rapidly scale up hiring of aeronautic­al engineers, physicists, computer science and electric propulsion experts, Mr Gerber said.

Lilium said the new funding, led by Chinese internet giant Tencent, also includes Liechtenst­ein-based LGT,

Europe’s largest family-owned investment firm; European venture firm Atomico; and Obvious Ventures, whose cofounder, Evan Williams, is a cofounder of Twitter.

Long the stuff of science fiction and futuristic cartoons such as ‘The Jetsons’, aviation and technology leaders are now racing to develop new types of electric-powered flying vehicles, dubbed ‘flying cars.’

Firms working on flying cars include Airbus, Uber and a range of start-ups including one backed by Google co-founder Larry Page, called Kitty Hawk.

In April, Lilium said it was developing a five-seat ‘flying taxi’ after mounting successful test flights of a full-size, twoseat jet capable of a mid-air transition from hover mode, like drones, to wing-borne flight, like convention­al aircraft.

Wing-borne, electricpo­wered flight allows commuter aircraft to travel five or six times the distance of drones, a Lilium executive said.

A 12-mile (20 kilometre) trip from Manhattan to JFK Airport could take as little as five minutes, he estimated.

Lilium is shooting for a manned test flight of its fiveseat aircraft around 2019, and to roll-out ‘flying taxi’ commuter services, subject to regulatory approvals, sometime in the next decade. The lightweigh­t aircraft will be powered by 36 electric jet engines mounted on its wings via 12 moveable flaps.

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